Share this article

Confirmed: Bloomberg staff are testing a bitcoin price ticker

A source inside Bloomberg has privately confirmed that the company is testing a bitcoin price ticker among its staff.

Updated Sep 14, 2021, 2:11 p.m. Published Aug 10, 2013, 6:54 p.m.
ticket-bloomberg-bitcoin

Article updated on August 11 at 23:50 (BST).

A source inside Bloomberg has privately confirmed that the company is testing a bitcoin ticker among its internal staff.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters

The news, which should be officially confirmed by Monday, first surfaced on BTCGeek yesterday. The site said that someone overheard an employee of the financial giant at a Satoshi Square meeting mentioning that the currency was now available on the terminal, and that subsequent checks confirmed it.

“Bloomberg employees can see the Bitcoin ticker under {XBT Crncy<GO>} on their Bloomberg terminal and look up it’s [sic] pricing,” said the site.

The company is said to be using Mt. Gox and TradeHill as sources. The former is still the incumbent exchange, in spite of its performance problems, while TradeHill has targeted high net worth individuals, and is at the front of the field in terms of negotiating with US regulators.

Our source said that this is just a prototype page to test the currency's data feed with internal staff, and added that the company has been testing this for far longer than just a week.

The bitcoin community has been asking Bloomberg for support for a while. As early as April, one person told BitcoinTalk that he was asking for price histories, graphing, and some technical analysis, along with headlines. Bloomberg said that it was tracking interest in it among its business managers.

This isn't the first charting or ticker service for bitcoin, of course. You can find tickers at Clarkmoody, Bitcoincharts has charting, as do Bitcoinity and Bitcointicker. CoinDesk also has the Bitcoin Price Index (BPI).

Nevertheless, this will be a shot in the arm for the virtual currency – even more so, if it made it out to public users of the terminal. An internal test could indicate that Bloomberg is seeing how the ticker data performs before making it more widely available.

UPDATE:

Vera Newhouse, spokesperson for Bloomberg, has now officially confirmed the news.

"Bloomberg is testing Bitcoin data, but this is only accessible to internal users and not Bloomberg Professional service subscribers," she said. "We often prototype new functions and dashboards; some that are eventually rolled out, and some that aren't. It's premature to provide any details about Bloomberg's plans for this prototype at this stage."

More For You

State of the Blockchain 2025

State of the Blockchain 16:9

L1 tokens broadly underperformed in 2025 despite a backdrop of regulatory and institutional wins. Explore the key trends defining ten major blockchains below.

What to know:

2025 was defined by a stark divergence: structural progress collided with stagnant price action. Institutional milestones were reached and TVL increased across most major ecosystems, yet the majority of large-cap Layer-1 tokens finished the year with negative or flat returns.

This report analyzes the structural decoupling between network usage and token performance. We examine 10 major blockchain ecosystems, exploring protocol versus application revenues, key ecosystem narratives, mechanics driving institutional adoption, and the trends to watch as we head into 2026.

More For You

Bitcoin will be 'top performer' in 2026 after getting crushed this year, says VanEck

Gold Bars

VanEck's David Schassler expects gold and bitcoin to rebound sharply as investor demand for hard assets is expected to rise.

What to know:

  • Bitcoin has underperformed compared to gold and the Nasdaq 100 this year, but a VanEck manager predicts a strong comeback in 2026.
  • David Schassler, the firm's head of multi-asset solutions, expects gold's surge to continue to $5,000 next year as fiscal "debasement" accelerates.
  • Bitcoin will likely follow gold’s breakout, driven by returning liquidity and long-term demand for scarce assets.